When I read the article in the Catholic Leaven, my heart skipped a beat. Catholics in the archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas, are going to stop Planned Parenthood. They are going to shut down Planned Parenthood’s abortion center in Overland Park, Kansas, where 100 babies are killed each week. They are going to do it with rosaries in hand, boots on the ground, and a bold public witness. They are going to do all this while offering hope and help at the epicenter of despair. They will succeed in closing Planned Parenthood. This is why:

The filth fest that was the annual Seaside Adolescent Sexuality Conference reached from state offices into school districts across the state. It seemed an impossible situation for parents to overcome. But through perseverance, they have overcome the odds and this year’s conference has been canceled. “It is a classic David beats Goliath story,” Jim Welsh of Parents’ Rights in Education told STOPP.

From its earliest days, the development, research, and promotion of the pill were built on lies. The lies continue today. Women are irreparably harmed by those lies. Children are killed by those lies. Families are ripped apart by those lies. And society hangs in the balance because America has not been told the truth. As American Life League gears up for our 2015 Pill Kills National Day of Action on June 6, we will shed light on the lies that surround the pill and the resultant contraceptive culture—and we will expose the truth. Here are four ways that the pill kills truth.

STOPP’s Rita Diller is on the road again. After returning from a very icy trip to Cleveland Right to Life’s outstanding Bringing America Back to Life Convention, she is headed for the warmth of San Antonio, Texas. Diller will be speaking at the Defend Life, Family, and Freedom benefit dinner for San Antonio Family Association on March 20.

Something big is stirring in El Centro, California. Planned Parenthood is trying to open a killing center there, but the community is rising up in opposition. And it is rising up in huge numbers. More than 2,000 people attended a recent city council meeting to object.